| Literature DB >> 19149901 |
Nina Lagerqvist1, Jonas Näslund, Ake Lundkvist, Michèle Bouloy, Clas Ahlm, Göran Bucht.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Affecting both livestock and humans, Rift Valley Fever is considered as one of the most important viral zoonoses in Africa. However, no licensed vaccines or effective treatments are yet available for human use. Naked DNA vaccines are an interesting approach since the virus is highly infectious and existing attenuated Rift Valley Fever virus vaccine strains display adverse effects in animal trials. In this study, gene-gun immunisations with cDNA encoding structural proteins of the Rift Valley Fever virus were evaluated in mice. The induced immune responses were analysed for the ability to protect mice against virus challenge.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19149901 PMCID: PMC2637244 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-6-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Primers sequences
| 5'-ATGGAAGACCCCCATCTCAGAAA-3' | 5'-CTATGAGGCCTTCTTAGTGGC-3' | |
| 5'-ATGGAAGACCCCCATCTCAGAAA-3' | 5'-TGCTGATGCATATGAGACAATC-3' | |
| 5'-ATGTGTTCAGAACTGATTCAGGCA-3' | 5'-CTATGAGGCCTTCTTAGTGGC-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGGACAACTATCAAGAGCTT-3' | 5'-GGCTGCTGTCTTGTAAGCC-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGAGTGACTTGACAGATATCCA-3' | 5'-TATCTTAAGTGGATCCTGATTAGATA-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGGACAACTATCAAGAGCTT-3' | 5'-GGCTGCTGTCTTGTAAGCC-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGGACAACTATCAAGAGCTT-3' | 5'-ATCCCGGGAAGGATTCCCT-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGATGATGAAAATGTCGAAAG-3' | 5'-TTAAGAGTGAGCATCTAATATT-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGCCGAGGCATATGATGCACC-3' | 5'-GGCTGCTGTCTTGTAAGCC-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGGACAACTATCAAGAGCTT-3' | 5'-AGAGTGAGCATCTAATATT-3' | |
| 5'-CACCATGATGATGAAAATGTCGAAAG-3' | 5'-TAAGGCTGCTGTCTTGTAAGCC-3' |
Eukaryotic expression.
Prokaryotic expression.
Figure 1Anti-N specific antibody responses (total Ig) after gene-gun vaccination with cDNA encoding the RVFV N protein. The curves correspond to the mean titers in individual mouse sera measured by ELISA. The error bars represent the standard deviation between replicates. Arrows along the X-axis illustrate the time points of vaccination.
Figure 2Western blot reactivity towards the N protein and truncated variants thereof. (A) Schematic presentation of the full length and deleted variants of the RVFV N antigens. Different filter strips represent different recombinant proteins. The sera were obtained from (B) seven mice vaccinated with cDNA encoding the complete N protein or (C) nine mice infected with RVFV. The sera were collected after four immunisations or 14 days p.i., respectively. Antibodies binding to the amino- or carboxy-terminal His-tag or V5-tag of the recombinant proteins were used as positive controls (Ctrl).
Figure 3Lymphocyte proliferation test performed on spleen cells from mice vaccinated with cDNA encoding the N protein. The curves correspond to the incorporated radioactivity measured for cells of five immunised mice and the dotted curves represent four control mice immunised with the vector without insert. The error bars represent the standard deviation between replicates. The spleen cells were stimulated for proliferation using the indicated N antigen concentrations (0.1, 0.3, 1.0 and 3.0 μg/ml).
Neutralising antibody titers and outcome after challenge after DNA vaccination against RVFV
| Asymptomatic | Clinical signs | Deaths | ||||
| N | 4 | < 25 | 2.4 × 103 | 1 | 3 | |
| 4 | < 25 | 2.4 × 104 | 3 | 1 | ||
| GN/GC | 4 | 25 – 75 | 2.4 × 103 | 2 | 2 | |
| 4 | 25 – 75 | 2.4 × 104 | 3 | 1 | ||
| Ctrl/PUU-N | 4 | - | 2.4 × 103 | 3 | 1 | |
| 4 | - | 2.4 × 104 | 3 | 1 | ||
| Ctrl/pcDNA3.1 | 3 | - | 2.4 × 103 | 3 | ||
| 3 | - | 2.4 × 104 | 3 | |||
Virus neutralising antibody titers after vaccination.
Number of animals displaying clinical signs (ruffled fur/shivering), followed by complete recovery.
Number of animals displaying a moribund condition (fatigue/"hunchback-like posture") followed by euthanization.